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#11 (permalink) |
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Elite Member
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Spring, TX (Houston)
Posts: 2,665
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Yep you need 3 total.
6" HF bench grinder...cheap, for stuff when you need a soft touch or lots of control 7" (or 9") angle grinder, $25 at HF. Start with 2 different discs..BOTH screw on. Heavy for grinding, thinner for cutting (but not like a real thin cutter disc). get the discs/wheels at a local weldind shop. 4" or 4.5" angle grinder, $9 at HF, I have 3. Then go to a welding shop and get a screw on grinding blade. Also pick up some thin cutting blades. These won't last long but they cut nice and clean and are a little over a buck a piece. HF has them but they don't last quite as long. Almost a wash. My local steel has been selling some 7" Dewalt wheels that are cupped, I do find them easier to round over and work with stuff. And someone just mentioned, I had to use a dremel this weekend to. It's rare but handy. Good Luck, Rob PS, while you are at HF grab a $15 sawzall.
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L2500 |
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#13 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Posts: 58
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I agree that the angle grinder is more versital than the bench, but spend a little extra money and buy the Harbor Freight Tools - Quality Tools at the Lowest Prices I find this unit to be as tough as a Dewault. Also while in the welding supply store be SURE and get a "flapper wheel" in 60 grit. It is the best thing I've ever found for sharpening blades and tools. Leaves a smooth and almost polished edge every time.
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#14 (permalink) |
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Bronze Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 56
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bench grinder. Got one for christmas. Love it, and it is WAY more stable and easy to control then a 10k RPM angle grinder working on something in a vise. Craftsman has a very nice one (what i got) for $50 and a 2 year warrenty for $10. Cant beat that
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#15 (permalink) |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,386
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I bit the bullet and started with a 4.5" Mastercraft angle grinder from Canadian Tire. We don't have HF up here. Mastercraft is about equivalent to crafstman I guess. It was on sale with a whole supply of grinding disks.
Didn't realise that could also use the angle grinder to sharpen my mower blade. Makes sense - just never thought about it :-).
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Kubota L3400HST+Horst toothbar, 4 Spool Prince valve, CCM TnT, Woods BB60 rotary cutter, Kodiak 7' rake, Walco Meteor 68" snowblower, Walco 7' cultivator, Horst 3pt bale spear, Maybridge 8'8" chain harrow, Woods HB72 box balde |
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#16 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Boston & Martha's Vineyard, People's Republik of Massachusetts
Posts: 810
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no HF out here either, but I mail order a lot of stuff from them. Their shipping is sillily cheap. Not sure how that would work to Canada of course, but I'm sure its come up before...
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---------------------------------------- Charles Kubota B3030 Kubota M59 w/hydro thumb on order Too many attachments to list (or to own, per my gf) and a really bad tool addiction. But at least I haven't bought a dump truck or bulldozer. Yet. |
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#17 (permalink) | |
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Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Foothills of the Giant Sequoia's, California
Posts: 5,105
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Quote:
However, I agree that the angle grinder is a little more mobile. You do need a good vise to hold your stuff though. With a bench grinder, be sure it's bolted down well.
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Rob- ...The Older I get...the Better I Used to be... |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Foothills of the Giant Sequoia's, California
Posts: 5,105
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Quote:
Use your vise and a magnet to keep the swivel quite. Or you could grind the swivels like this on a surface grinder. First photo shows the grind and second one shows one ground and what it used to look like. So with that in mind, I would say get a surface grinder too! ![]()
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Rob- ...The Older I get...the Better I Used to be... |
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#19 (permalink) |
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Platinum Member
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Front Range of Colorado
Posts: 778
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I have a 10" Delta bench grinder mounted on a floor pedestal (wish I bought the Jet instead), a 4-1/2" Bosch angle grinder, and a Dremel moto-tool. I wouldn't be without any of them as they all serve useful purposes in a shop.
The 4-1/2" angle grinder is great for mobility and shaping, plus I use mine extensively for wire brushing with cup wheels. The bench grinder is great for finesse on some items, and it removes material fairly rapidly with the right wheel. I primarily use the coarse grit wheel. The Dremel is handy for those times where you need to get into tight areas for light removal work. The keyword is "light". Make sure you get a variable speed Dremel as a single speed one spinning at 30k+/- RPM is too limiting in what you can do with it. As others have said...EYE PROTECTION is paramount with all of these tools. Though I tend to shun gloves around machinery, I generally wear them when using the bench and angle grinder for heat and debris protection. Just keep them away from moving parts so your hand doesn't get sucked into the wheels. A well made (Makita) cup wire brush will still throw wires at 11K RPM and wire brushing can make the metal hot too. I would like to get a combo 12" disc & 4" x 48" belt grinder/sander next. Either a Grizzly or a Wilton, and it will probably be the Grizzly due to lower costs. OK 3RRL...a surface grinder! Now we are talking serious grinding with precision to boot!
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Measure it with a micrometer, mark it with chalk, cut it with a torch, beat to fit, paint to match, inspect it with a microscope. Added sprayer modifications gallery. 07/06/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/FIMCOSprayer Added second camera to Lights, Camera, ACTION! & Thumper needs new teeth to John Deere L130 galleries. 06/11/2008 http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/LightsCameraACTION http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad/JohnDeereL130Misc http://picasaweb.google.com/mjncad |
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#20 (permalink) | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Sonoma County
Posts: 1,955
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Quote:
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1980 Yanmar YM240 photos
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